The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Roman Germany
Herausgeber: James, Simon; Krmnicek, Stefan
The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Roman Germany
Herausgeber: James, Simon; Krmnicek, Stefan
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This Handbook makes the work of modern German and overwhelmingly German-language scholarship on the archaeology of Roman Germany available in English, presenting the latest developments in current research and providing a truly international perspective on the topic.
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This Handbook makes the work of modern German and overwhelmingly German-language scholarship on the archaeology of Roman Germany available in English, presenting the latest developments in current research and providing a truly international perspective on the topic.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 656
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Mai 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 248mm x 181mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1339g
- ISBN-13: 9780199665730
- ISBN-10: 0199665737
- Artikelnr.: 57978358
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 656
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Mai 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 248mm x 181mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1339g
- ISBN-13: 9780199665730
- ISBN-10: 0199665737
- Artikelnr.: 57978358
Simon James is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Leicester. After a decade at the British Museum as an archaeological illustrator and then as an educator, he returned to the University sector via a Leverhulme Fellowship at Durham. He joined the University of Leicester in January 2000, becoming professor in 2012. His research mainly relates to ancient conflict, especially in the Roman world and contemporary societies in Europe and the Middle East. Stefan Krmnicek is Junior Professor of Ancient Numismatics at the Institute of Classical Archaeology, University of Tübingen. His research interests cover a wide range of topics, including coin iconography, economic and social history, and archaeometry, with current research focuses on the study of money and coinage at the interface between archaeology, Roman and Iron Age numismatics, anthropology, and sociology.
* Introduction
* Part I: Prelude, Conquest, and Provincialisation
* 1. Occupation and Consolidation
* 1: Susanne Sievers: The Lands of Germania in the Later Pre-Roman Iron
Age
* 2: Reinhard Wolters: Emergence of the Provinces
* 2. Creating a Provincial Landscape
* 3: Klaus Kortüm: Archaeology of Germania Superior: Urban Settlements
* 4: Norbert Hanel: Archaeology of Germania Inferior: Urbanization
* 5: Thomas Maurer: Roman Rural Landscape Occupation in Present-Day
Germany: An Overview
* Part II: Core Provinces at the Edge of Empire
* 3. Wars and Frontiers
* 6: Günther Moosbauer: Roman Battlefields in Germany: Kalkriese and
Harzhorn
* 7: Martin Kemkes: The Limes
* 4. An Integrated Economy
* 8: Susanne Biegert and Markus Helfert: Roman Pottery Research in
Germany
* 9: David Wigg-Wolf: Coinage and Money in the Roman Rhineland
* 5. Constituting Provincial Identity
* 10: Constanze Höpken: Religion, Cult, and Burial Customs in the
German Provinces
* 11: Kreimir Matijevi¿: Writing and Literacy/Illiteracy
* 12: Alexandra W. Busch and Henner von Hesberg: Provincial Art
* Part III: The Transformation of Power
* 6. Crisis of the Third Century
* 13: Marcus Reuter: 'Vi barbarorum absumptam': A Military History of
Roman Germany during the Third Century AD
* 14: Michaela Konrad: Crisis Research in a Civil Context
* 7. Germani and Rome
* 15: Claus von Carnap-Bornheim: The Germani and the German Provinces
of Rome
* 16: Michael Meyer: Roman Cultural Influence in Western Germania Magna
* 17: Claudia Theune: Transformations in the Roman West: The Case of
the Alamanni
* 8. After Rome
* 18: Hubert Fehr: The Transformation into the Early Middle Ages
* 19: Alexander Heising: Reception and History of Research in the Roman
Provinces of Germany
* Part IV: External Perspectives and Final Thoughts
* 9. The Foreign Commentaries
* 20: Nico Roymans: The Archaeology of Roman Germany, A Dutch
Perspective
* 21: Michel Reddé: Roman Germania? What Germania?
* 22: Ian Haynes: Germanies, Britains, and the Roman World
* 23: Philip Kiernan: Roman Germany and Provincial Archaeology, The
North American Perspective
* 10. Final Word
* 24: Thomas Fischer: Concluding Remarks on the Handbook of the
Archaeology of Roman Germany
* Part I: Prelude, Conquest, and Provincialisation
* 1. Occupation and Consolidation
* 1: Susanne Sievers: The Lands of Germania in the Later Pre-Roman Iron
Age
* 2: Reinhard Wolters: Emergence of the Provinces
* 2. Creating a Provincial Landscape
* 3: Klaus Kortüm: Archaeology of Germania Superior: Urban Settlements
* 4: Norbert Hanel: Archaeology of Germania Inferior: Urbanization
* 5: Thomas Maurer: Roman Rural Landscape Occupation in Present-Day
Germany: An Overview
* Part II: Core Provinces at the Edge of Empire
* 3. Wars and Frontiers
* 6: Günther Moosbauer: Roman Battlefields in Germany: Kalkriese and
Harzhorn
* 7: Martin Kemkes: The Limes
* 4. An Integrated Economy
* 8: Susanne Biegert and Markus Helfert: Roman Pottery Research in
Germany
* 9: David Wigg-Wolf: Coinage and Money in the Roman Rhineland
* 5. Constituting Provincial Identity
* 10: Constanze Höpken: Religion, Cult, and Burial Customs in the
German Provinces
* 11: Kreimir Matijevi¿: Writing and Literacy/Illiteracy
* 12: Alexandra W. Busch and Henner von Hesberg: Provincial Art
* Part III: The Transformation of Power
* 6. Crisis of the Third Century
* 13: Marcus Reuter: 'Vi barbarorum absumptam': A Military History of
Roman Germany during the Third Century AD
* 14: Michaela Konrad: Crisis Research in a Civil Context
* 7. Germani and Rome
* 15: Claus von Carnap-Bornheim: The Germani and the German Provinces
of Rome
* 16: Michael Meyer: Roman Cultural Influence in Western Germania Magna
* 17: Claudia Theune: Transformations in the Roman West: The Case of
the Alamanni
* 8. After Rome
* 18: Hubert Fehr: The Transformation into the Early Middle Ages
* 19: Alexander Heising: Reception and History of Research in the Roman
Provinces of Germany
* Part IV: External Perspectives and Final Thoughts
* 9. The Foreign Commentaries
* 20: Nico Roymans: The Archaeology of Roman Germany, A Dutch
Perspective
* 21: Michel Reddé: Roman Germania? What Germania?
* 22: Ian Haynes: Germanies, Britains, and the Roman World
* 23: Philip Kiernan: Roman Germany and Provincial Archaeology, The
North American Perspective
* 10. Final Word
* 24: Thomas Fischer: Concluding Remarks on the Handbook of the
Archaeology of Roman Germany
* Introduction
* Part I: Prelude, Conquest, and Provincialisation
* 1. Occupation and Consolidation
* 1: Susanne Sievers: The Lands of Germania in the Later Pre-Roman Iron
Age
* 2: Reinhard Wolters: Emergence of the Provinces
* 2. Creating a Provincial Landscape
* 3: Klaus Kortüm: Archaeology of Germania Superior: Urban Settlements
* 4: Norbert Hanel: Archaeology of Germania Inferior: Urbanization
* 5: Thomas Maurer: Roman Rural Landscape Occupation in Present-Day
Germany: An Overview
* Part II: Core Provinces at the Edge of Empire
* 3. Wars and Frontiers
* 6: Günther Moosbauer: Roman Battlefields in Germany: Kalkriese and
Harzhorn
* 7: Martin Kemkes: The Limes
* 4. An Integrated Economy
* 8: Susanne Biegert and Markus Helfert: Roman Pottery Research in
Germany
* 9: David Wigg-Wolf: Coinage and Money in the Roman Rhineland
* 5. Constituting Provincial Identity
* 10: Constanze Höpken: Religion, Cult, and Burial Customs in the
German Provinces
* 11: Kreimir Matijevi¿: Writing and Literacy/Illiteracy
* 12: Alexandra W. Busch and Henner von Hesberg: Provincial Art
* Part III: The Transformation of Power
* 6. Crisis of the Third Century
* 13: Marcus Reuter: 'Vi barbarorum absumptam': A Military History of
Roman Germany during the Third Century AD
* 14: Michaela Konrad: Crisis Research in a Civil Context
* 7. Germani and Rome
* 15: Claus von Carnap-Bornheim: The Germani and the German Provinces
of Rome
* 16: Michael Meyer: Roman Cultural Influence in Western Germania Magna
* 17: Claudia Theune: Transformations in the Roman West: The Case of
the Alamanni
* 8. After Rome
* 18: Hubert Fehr: The Transformation into the Early Middle Ages
* 19: Alexander Heising: Reception and History of Research in the Roman
Provinces of Germany
* Part IV: External Perspectives and Final Thoughts
* 9. The Foreign Commentaries
* 20: Nico Roymans: The Archaeology of Roman Germany, A Dutch
Perspective
* 21: Michel Reddé: Roman Germania? What Germania?
* 22: Ian Haynes: Germanies, Britains, and the Roman World
* 23: Philip Kiernan: Roman Germany and Provincial Archaeology, The
North American Perspective
* 10. Final Word
* 24: Thomas Fischer: Concluding Remarks on the Handbook of the
Archaeology of Roman Germany
* Part I: Prelude, Conquest, and Provincialisation
* 1. Occupation and Consolidation
* 1: Susanne Sievers: The Lands of Germania in the Later Pre-Roman Iron
Age
* 2: Reinhard Wolters: Emergence of the Provinces
* 2. Creating a Provincial Landscape
* 3: Klaus Kortüm: Archaeology of Germania Superior: Urban Settlements
* 4: Norbert Hanel: Archaeology of Germania Inferior: Urbanization
* 5: Thomas Maurer: Roman Rural Landscape Occupation in Present-Day
Germany: An Overview
* Part II: Core Provinces at the Edge of Empire
* 3. Wars and Frontiers
* 6: Günther Moosbauer: Roman Battlefields in Germany: Kalkriese and
Harzhorn
* 7: Martin Kemkes: The Limes
* 4. An Integrated Economy
* 8: Susanne Biegert and Markus Helfert: Roman Pottery Research in
Germany
* 9: David Wigg-Wolf: Coinage and Money in the Roman Rhineland
* 5. Constituting Provincial Identity
* 10: Constanze Höpken: Religion, Cult, and Burial Customs in the
German Provinces
* 11: Kreimir Matijevi¿: Writing and Literacy/Illiteracy
* 12: Alexandra W. Busch and Henner von Hesberg: Provincial Art
* Part III: The Transformation of Power
* 6. Crisis of the Third Century
* 13: Marcus Reuter: 'Vi barbarorum absumptam': A Military History of
Roman Germany during the Third Century AD
* 14: Michaela Konrad: Crisis Research in a Civil Context
* 7. Germani and Rome
* 15: Claus von Carnap-Bornheim: The Germani and the German Provinces
of Rome
* 16: Michael Meyer: Roman Cultural Influence in Western Germania Magna
* 17: Claudia Theune: Transformations in the Roman West: The Case of
the Alamanni
* 8. After Rome
* 18: Hubert Fehr: The Transformation into the Early Middle Ages
* 19: Alexander Heising: Reception and History of Research in the Roman
Provinces of Germany
* Part IV: External Perspectives and Final Thoughts
* 9. The Foreign Commentaries
* 20: Nico Roymans: The Archaeology of Roman Germany, A Dutch
Perspective
* 21: Michel Reddé: Roman Germania? What Germania?
* 22: Ian Haynes: Germanies, Britains, and the Roman World
* 23: Philip Kiernan: Roman Germany and Provincial Archaeology, The
North American Perspective
* 10. Final Word
* 24: Thomas Fischer: Concluding Remarks on the Handbook of the
Archaeology of Roman Germany